* We’ve wandered way off the subject.
* I took a wrong turning and went way off course.

If you make a lot of effort and inconvenience yourself to help somebody, you ‘go out of your way’ to help them.

* I went out of my way to help him and he didn’t even thank me.
* Don’t go out of your way to do it but, if you see any Cadbury’s chocolate, will you get me some?

Some people want both to work less and to earn more money. They want to ‘have it both ways’.

* You can’t have it both ways. Which is more important to you?
* A full-time job and a full-time family carer? It’s difficult to have it both ways.

If you want to avoid somebody, you ‘keep out of their way’.

* The boss is in a bad mood. Keep out of her way.
* I wasn’t deliberately keeping out of your way.

If you change the order of two things, you put them ‘the other way round’.

* As Brian hasn’t arrived yet, we’re going to put the first two presentations the other way round and start with Jane’s.
* It’s not that she’s mad with him. It’s the other way round. He’s mad with her.

‘To my way of thinking’ means ‘in my opinion’.

* Jane is a better speaker to my way of thinking.
* To my way of thinking, we need to find a better candidate.

If you have no opinion between two choices, you don’t mind ‘either way’.

* Drive, if you prefer. I don’t mind either way.
* We could meet here or there. Either way is good for me.

‘On the way’ means that it is coming.

* I have a new baby on the way.
* She’s on her way but got held up in traffic.

If things have changed a lot, they have ‘come a long way’.

* We started out in one small office but we’ve come a long way since then.
* We’ve both come a long way since I first met you as an office junior.

When you give some information as incidental to the main conversation, you can introduce it by saying ‘by the way’.

* By the way, did I tell you that Leslie is going to Ghana?
* By the way, I’m taking tomorrow off.